Host and donor immune responses contribute to antiviral effects of amotosalen-treated donor lymphocytes following early posttransplant cytomegalovirus infection

MS Hossain, JD Roback, F Wang… - The Journal of …, 2008 - journals.aai.org
MS Hossain, JD Roback, F Wang, EK Waller
The Journal of Immunology, 2008journals.aai.org
We have previously shown that amotosalen-treated splenocytes rescued allorecipients from
a lethal dose of mouse CMV (MCMV) administered on day 0 in experimental parent
C57BL/6→ CB6F1 allogeneic bone marrow transplant. In this study, we investigated the
mechanism of antiviral activity of amotosalen-treated donor splenocytes when sublethal
MCMV infections were administered 7 days posttransplant. Recipients of 3× 10 6 untreated
splenocytes were used as control. Following MCMV infection, recipients of untreated …
Abstract
We have previously shown that amotosalen-treated splenocytes rescued allorecipients from a lethal dose of mouse CMV (MCMV) administered on day 0 in experimental parent C57BL/6→ CB6F1 allogeneic bone marrow transplant. In this study, we investigated the mechanism of antiviral activity of amotosalen-treated donor splenocytes when sublethal MCMV infections were administered 7 days posttransplant. Recipients of 3× 10 6 untreated splenocytes were used as control. Following MCMV infection, recipients of untreated splenocytes had 40% early mortality due to acute graft-vs-host disease compared with no deaths among recipients of 10× 10 6 treated splenocytes. However, recipients of both types of donor splenocytes effectively cleared MCMV from their liver. Like the untreated CD8+ T cells, amotosalen-treated CD8+ T cells equally retained their in vivo CTL activity against MCMV early peptide-pulsed targets and expressed similar levels of granzyme B within 11 days of infection. In contrast to full donor chimerism in recipients of untreated splenocytes, recipients of amotosalen-treated splenocytes showed mixed chimerism with both donor spleen-and host-derived anti-MCMV CD8+ T cells in their blood and lymphoid organs, with significantly higher numbers of host-derived CD4− CD8−(double negative) T cells in the spleens of recipients of treated splenocytes compared with the recipients of untreated splenocytes. Additionally, recipients of amotosalen-treated splenocytes had lower levels of serum IFN-γ and TNF-α in response to MCMV infection compared with untreated recipients. Thus, adoptive immunotherapy with treated T cells is a novel therapeutic approach that facilitates hematopoietic engraftment and permits antiviral immunity of both donor and host T cells without graft-vs-host disease.
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